Mann’s somber western receives an excellent home video release from Arrow Video.
Unsurprisingly, Welles doesn’t efface his artistic personality for The Trial.
A Galaxy of Conspiracy Chaos: William Richert’s Winter Kills, Presented by Quentin Tarantino
The history of Winter Kills is nearly as lurid and tangled as the conspiracy it depicts.
I’m Dangerous Tonight has looks to kill on Kino Lorber’s Blu-ray.
Edge of Sanity is a luridly stylized and slyly subversive adaptation of the Jekyll and Hyde story.
Despite an inconsistent video transfer, Russell’s lascivious neo-noir gets a fine Blu-ray from Arrow Video.
Norman Bates gets out of the funny house and reacquaints himself with the tedium of a day job. It doesn’t go well.
The film is a simmering small-town New England noir with an acidic comic streak.
It’s hard to look at Tuesday Weld’s career without feeling a tiny pang of regret for what could have been.
Absolutely worth seeking out for diehard fans of the 1970s Hollywood renaissance.
Psycho’s power is not just that of a showman’s calibrated scare machine.
It seems like it’s heading toward all-out camp for a while, but it goes in a weirder direction as Anthony Perkins’s character takes over.
Kicky but muddled, it’s still a valuable reminder of Ross and Williams in their too-brief moment in the sun.